News: Features

Features

William Morton Wheeler

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Features

Visualizing Science 2018: Beauty and Inspiration in College Research

Winners of the 2018 Visualizing Science contest include images of nanomaterials, the connection between chaos and electronics and a glimpse into the aural lives of the elderly.

A pseudocolored transmission electron micrograph of nanodroplets filled with paramagnetic metals and perfluorocarbon materials.

Features

The Robb Butterfly Collection

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Features

Extending a Welcome Mat for Scientific, Mathematical Talent

To advance a sense of belonging, while addressing challenges that disproportionately occur for women and people from underrepresented groups, a number of initiatives are underway.

Two students talking on steps in front of the main administration building at the University of Texas at Austin

Features

History of UT Botany, Part 5: Beryl Simpson

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Features

Clark Hubbs

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Features

5 Things Scientists Say to Try in Your Yard This Spring

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Closeup of coral honeysuckle blooms

Features

Visualizing Science 2017: Finding the Hidden Beauty in College Research

Five years ago the College of Natural Sciences began an annual tradition called Visualizing Science with the intent of finding the inherent beauty hidden within scholarly research.

This image shows the turbulent gas structures in a three-dimensional, multi-physics supercomputer simulation during the formation of such massive clusters, with the red-to-violet rainbow spectrum representing gas at high-to-low densities.

Features

Elmer Lund and the "Window on the Sea"

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